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Aug 20, 2013

Seven Social Network Attacks for Network Hacking

Do you need to keep up with the latest hacks, attacks, and exploits effecting social networks? Then you need Seven Deadliest Social Network Attacks. This book pinpoints the most dangerous hacks and exploits specific to social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace, laying out the anatomy of these attacks including how to make your system more secure. You will discover the best ways to defend against these vicious hacks with step-by-step instruction and learn techniques to make your computer and network impenetrable.

This book (Seven Deadliest Social Network Attacks) identifies seven classes of network attacks and discusses how the attack works, including tools to accomplish the attack, what are the risks of the attack, and how to defend against the attack. Seven attacks were chosen: denial of service, war dialing, penetration testing, protocol tunneling, spanning tree attacks, man-in-themiddle, and password replay.

These are not mutually exclusive; you can exploit the spanning tree protocol, for example, to launch a denial-of-service (DOS) attack. These were chosen because they help illustrate different aspects of network security; the principles on which they rely are unlikely to vanish any time soon, and they allow for the possibility of gaining something of interest to the attacker, from money to high-value data.

Chapter 5 (Spanning Tree Attacks) :- Discusses the “layer 2” network responsible for knitting together your switches, routers, and other devices into a reliable network and illustrates one way in which to exploit the weak security of this layer.

Chapter 6 (Man-in-the-Middle) :- Discusses a very common attack pattern and just what an attacker can accomplish once he or she has inserted himself or herself into your data stream.

Chapter 7 (Password Replay) :- Focuses on the security of passwords and other static security measures and how an attacker can use various techniques to gain unauthorized access.

This book is intended to provide practical, usable information. However, the world of network security is evolving very rapidly, and the attack that works today may (hopefully) not work tomorrow. It is more important, then, to understand the principles on which the attacks and exploits are based in order to properly plan either a network attack or a network defense. The authors chose the contents of this book because we believe that, underlying the attacks presented here, there are important principles of network security. The attacks are deadly because they exploit principles,assumptions, and practices that are true today and that we believe are likely to remain true for the foreseeable future.